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Barbara Hollingsworth: Defending the honor of Thomas Jefferson

By: Barbara Hollingsworth
Examiner Columnist
September 1, 2009

Thomas Jefferson, the once -revered sage of Monticello and principal author of the Declaration of Independence, has been knocked off his pedestal in recent years, the victim of what many historians believe is his own hypocrisy.

But William Hyland, Jr. claims that Jefferson himself is the victim of a 200-year-old character defamation recast as revisionist history. A former Virginia attorney who now practices law in Tampa, Florida, Hyland has taken on the academic establishment defending Jefferson from oft-repeated accusations that he fathered children with his slave, Sally Hemings.

Hyland told me he spent close to three years researching "In Defense of Thomas Jefferson," which has climbed to the 16th best seller on Amazon's History listing. After taking a methodical look at all of the evidence from a defense attorney's point of view, Hyland says he has no doubt that Jefferson is completely innocent, despite a 2000 report by the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation.

The report cited results of a 1998 DNA analysis and oral history passed on by Hemings' descendants, concluding that the third president was the likely father of at least one, if not all, of Hemings' children.

But if Jefferson were put on trial, Hyland maintains, most of the evidence against him would be thrown out. For example, the DNA study found a link between Eston Hemings, born in 1808, and a male Jefferson, but did not prove that Thomas Jefferson himself was Eston's father.

University of Virginia Jefferson scholar Robert Turner and 12 other distinguished scientists and historians unanimously agreed that the DNA could have come from any of two dozen other Jefferson males, they pointed out in their 2000 dissenting report.

Hyland also presents detailed historical evidence that implicates Jefferson's younger brother, Randolph, a widower who was known to socialize with the slaves at Monticello. Thomas is exonerated by the only recorded eyewitness: Edmund Bacon, the overseer of Monticello, who said that he personally witnessed another man besides Thomas Jefferson coming out of "[Sally's] room many a morning when I went up to Monticello very early."

Until 1976, the Hemings' oral tradition maintained that they descended from a Jefferson "uncle," which accurately describes Randolph, who had been invited to Monticello exactly nine months before Eston was born.

The 64-year-old Jefferson himself suffered debilitating migraines, rheumatoid arthritis, and severe urinary and intestinal problems that made sexual trysts with Hemings highly unlikely, Hyland writes.

Such behavior was roundly denied by Jefferson's only surviving daughter and her children, who spent much time at Monticello. After his beloved wife died young, Jefferson admitted being infatuated with the educated, sophisticated and married Maria Cosway while serving as minister to France - the same time he was supposedly launching a torrid love affair with the 14-year-old Hemings.

The Hemings accusation was first published in 1802 as a "vindictive political attack" by journalist James Callender, who was angry at Jefferson for not giving him a patronage job, so his motive was tainted. And, although Jefferson never denied the charge publicly, he did so privately in letters to friends and colleagues.

If Hyland's goal as Jefferson's self-appointed defense attorney was to raise reasonable doubts about the accusations leveled against one of our most prominent Founding Fathers, he does exactly that.

And while his book doesn't change the brutal fact that white plantation owners like Jefferson often took sexual advantage of their female slaves, forcing them to bear their unacknowledged offspring, it does remind us that even dead white males deserve to be considered innocent until proven guilty.

Barbara F. Hollingworth is The Examiner's local opinion editor.




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Sectionhand

Sep 1, 2009

I'm glad to see tomes of this nature finally finding the light of day . Despite the allegations of authors like Fawn Brody and others , Jefferson would have been averse in the extreme to a union with Sally Hemmings or any other woman of color especially one in a position of servitude . While in Paris , although Sally was there , Jefferson engaged in a rather disjointed relationship with Maria Cosway which led to the "My Head and My Heart" dissertation .

There exists not a shred of hard evidence to support the claims of the Hemmings family .

 

StepIntoTheLight

Sep 1, 2009

I am glad to read there is popularity in reading about the TRUTH, something quite lacking in the media these days with our current political leadership.

Thomas Jefferson could not have been the father of Sally Heming's children for a variety of reasons as noted in the article. It disturbs me to think how black Americans, in the name of revisionist history, want to embellish the REAL FACTS about what happened in the name of reparations for the past.

 

Past now Prologue

Sep 1, 2009

The reason behind the campaign to distort & otherwise besmirch the credibility of this visionary is that he predicted the unrest that would befall us if white& black were to live in proximity.

 

Does it REALLY matter???

Sep 2, 2009

While I applaud all those whose cause is to seek and report the truth, the most resounding fact in this case is that NONE of us were present when Sally Hemmings' children were concieved...therefore we don't know what the truth may be. The father(s) of Sally Hemmings children is truly unimportant in the grander scheme of race relations between black and white peoples. If for nothing else, Jefferson should be remembered not for the children he bore (legitimate or not), nor the women he loved, but for the America he helped to shape which we are now tearing apart with ease and abandon. If Jefferson were to step into our time and express himself, he would likely comment on our stagnant progress and our ability to turn even the most distinguished of men into a Maury Povich Show guest.

 

sell

Sep 3, 2009

On the issue of slavery I find it more important to focus on the fact that Jefferson originally called for an end of slavery in the Declaration of Independence only to have it removed to appease southern delegates. Later, despite his supposed views he did not free his own slaves- most where seized by creditors as property when he went bankrupt. Jefferson was a visionary and important, yet he was just like the rest of us- human and fallible. Whether he had sex with a slave or not would not change the end conclusion.

 

Herbert Barger

Sep 11, 2009

Mr. Hyland's book is an exzcellent book that ALL Americans should read and then transmit your thoughts to Monticello and ask that their biased report be reviewed for factual reporting. There is where the TRUTH MUST be told. Their friends, Annette Gordon-Reed, Peter Onuf, Joseph Ellis, Jan Lewis, and some others are telling the public UNPROVEN misinformation. There is a vast agenda surrounding this. Please read www.tjheritage.org and www.jeffersondna.com for the facts. Read the Scholars Commission Report here (13 prominent scholars). The public is being "CONNED."

Herb Barger
Jefferson Family Historian
Assistant to Dr. E.A. Foster, DNA Coordinator.

 

Fine Upstanding Slaveowner

Sep 30, 2009

Chattel slavery is honorable? How does one defend such a dishonorable, dehumanizing choice? Congratulations! You have defended nothing. We continue to view slaves as "the help", like the landscapers and maids some folks hire. Jefferson wasn't simply "fallible", or trapped by political circumstance. He chose to continue slave ownership in his own house. That reality is dishonorable enough.

 


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